TOL TRANSITIONS ONLINE PUBLISHES ARTICLE ABOUT RIGGED ELECTIONS IN ARMENIA
Armenia: Election Secrets Revealed
Crying foul over chicanery at Armenia`s polls and the honeyed tones of European diplomacy
The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has threatened to suspend Armenia`s voting rights in the body unless it makes considerable progress toward democratic and judicial reforms by PACE`s June session. PACE sent observers to witness Armenia`s presidential election in February. It declared the voting to be “mostly in line with the country`s international commitments, although further improvements are necessary to address remaining challenges.” John Prescott, a former British deputy prime minister who headed the delegation, said, “While we noted improvements in the framework for these elections, problems with its implementation, especially during the vote count, in some cases undermined the trust of the people.” Marietta de Pourbaix-Lundin, a parliamentarian from Sweden who was part of the Armenia mission, considered that an understatement. She delivered her speech during PACE’s 14 April session.
I have been in this parliamentary assembly since January 2007 and I have observed elections in four countries: Turkey, Ukraine, Russia and Armenia. The elections I observed in Armenia were the worst I have seen so far. The opening of the polling stations and the proceedings on the day were not too bad, but the counting in the polling station that I chose to visit was a disaster. Everything that could go wrong did go wrong. The number of voters who had voted and who had been marked on the list of voters was not counted, unused ballot papers were not destroyed and the protocol in which the results were to be entered had already been signed by members of the election committee.
The most serious incident involved the chairperson of the local election committee reading out the wrong names when the ballot papers were to be put into different piles for the nine candidates. The chairperson was well aware of what she was doing. She was taking votes from Levon Ter-Petrosian and allocating them to the [then-] prime minister, Serzh Sarkisian. Election officials tried to hide what they were doing by holding their hands over the ballot papers or by placing them in the middle of the piles so that I could not see them.
When the officials were supposed to sum up the votes for the different candidates, 100 votes were missing. I know that I was not supposed to say anything but I could not help mentioning what I had seen, so the officials pretended to count the votes quickly and then decided that those votes should go to Serzh Sarkisian, the guy who won the election. All candidates were allowed to have proxies to observe the elections and the counting, but the only observers at the polling station I chose were three young men from Serzh Sarkisian`s party. These three young men created an unpleasant and uneasy atmosphere in the room. My interpreter was very scared and asked me not to say anything more but just to observe and take notice. I noticed that all the election officials were well aware of what they were doing and they felt uneasy when I stood behind them watching the electoral fraud. But that did not prevent them from continuing to do what they had probably already planned, namely to ensure that the sitting prime minister got enough votes so that there would be no need for a second round. If what I observed occurred in just one-tenth of the polling stations, of course there would have been an effect on the result. I reported everything that I saw and returned to my hotel disillusioned, upset and tired. I could not sleep.
I am very critical of the fact that from a press conference the following day you could have got the impression that the election had been conducted in the most correct way and according to international standards. Do we help the Armenian people by believing that? I do not think so.
I also went to visit the parliament building. I tried to take a photograph, but three policemen and guards rushed after me and said, “No, no. You can’t take a photo.” I asked them in Russian, “Why?” and they told me that the parliament was “secret.” That summarizes very well the current position in Armenia. If a stronghold of democracy, which is what a parliament should be, is secret, there are no opportunities for democracy, transparency, human rights or free and fair elections.
Three days later, during another session on the Armenian election, Hungarian delegate Matyas Eorsi made the following remarks:
One problem is that we often tolerate rigged elections. If you visit the assembly’s website, you will often see headlines in the “news” section that say, “One step towards democracy”; we all know that we are not telling the truth. There can be some improvements in the election environment, but very often the elections in question are rigged. If we want to be helpful to those countries, the least we can do is speak up and tell the truth. Very often, when we discuss our relationship with member countries where there are democratic or election deficits, we reiterate the point that we have to reinforce our consultation with the governments of those countries so that elections can be conducted better, but if there are shortcomings in an election or administrative problems, we can do a lot to improve those elections.
In a country where an election is rigged, or has involved fraud or cheating, what the hell can we discuss with those governments? Can we say, “Please do not do this?” Of course they are fully aware of what they are doing. I do not think it is a matter of consultation. One of the major problems in Armenia, aside from what happened on that tragic day, is the general distrust of the democratic processes among the population because of the rigged elections. At the end of the day, those who lose the election cannot disprove the legitimacy of the election because of the procedures, which they have become used to. Of course it matters who wins an election, but it matters much more that wider society should be able to trust and have confidence in the constitution and the electoral processes.